The apple knife clicked softly against the cutting board. The coffeemaker on the counter let out one last tired gurgle. Outside the kitchen window, a yellow school bus rolled past the entrance of our subdivision and the leaves on the maple near the driveway moved in a breeze that already smelled like October.
My fingers tightened around the mug.
Living off him.
That was the phrase that lodged first. Not buy your own food, though that was cruel enough. Not from now on, though there was something cold and official about it, like a policy announcement at work. No, it was living off him that stripped something raw.
Because if I had lived off anyone in this house, then what had the last twelve years been?
What had the nights awake with Emma’s fever been?
What had the doctor appointments and school forms and meal planning and budgeting and laundry and birthday parties and teacher emails and grocery lists and late-night pharmacy runs and every invisible thing that kept a family upright actually been?
I stared at him, waiting for him to soften. To laugh bitterly and say he didn’t mean it like that. To rub his forehead and tell me work was getting to him. To do anything that would let me believe this was stress and not truth.
But he just lined the apple slices into a neat row on a paper towel.
The humiliation of that may have been the worst part. That he could say something so brutal and then go right on arranging fruit.
“What brought this on?” I asked.
He exhaled through his nose like I was being deliberately difficult.
“What brought it on is that I’m the only one making money, Laura. I’m paying the mortgage. The insurance. The tuition deposits. The utilities. Everything. And lately it feels like no matter how much I do, it’s never enough.”
I almost laughed, not because anything was funny but because the unreality of the moment made laughter feel closer than tears.
“Emma goes to public school,” I said quietly.
“You know what I mean.”
“Do I?”
At that, he did look at me, but only briefly. His face had changed over the past year in ways other people might not have noticed. It was still the face that had smiled at me at twenty-nine in a rainstorm outside a Cubs game. Still the face Emma had inherited around the eyes. But there was a new hardness in the jaw now, a habit of looking at me as if I were one more thing waiting for his attention.
“I mean,” he said, “I’m tired of being treated like the backup plan for everyone else’s needs. So yes. From now on, buy your own food. For you. For Emma if you want. But stop acting like I’m supposed to fund everything just because I’m here.”
My breath left me slowly.
He had included Emma almost casually, as if our daughter were a line item he could shove across a table.
I thought of saying a hundred things. That I had left a promising design career because we both agreed one parent needed more flexibility once Emma was born. That my freelance work dried up because every time I tried to restart it, something at home or school needed me first. That the reason he had been able to stay late at the office and say yes to every ambitious opportunity was because I had been the one standing behind the curtain making sure the rest of life didn’t collapse.
Instead, I said only, “Okay.”
He wiped the knife on a dish towel. He took his briefcase from the chair by the door. He did not apologize. He did not ask whether I meant okay in anger or grief or surrender. He simply left.
The latch clicked shut, and the sound echoed through the kitchen so sharply it felt bigger than the room.
I sat there long after his car backed down the driveway and the subdivision quieted again.
The coffee in my mug went lukewarm. The apple slices stayed on the counter, turning slightly brown at the edges. I could hear the hum of the refrigerator and the distant bark of somebody’s golden retriever two houses over. The ordinary sounds of a suburban morning. The kind of sounds that make you think life is intact even while something essential is splitting open under the surface.
By the time Emma came downstairs, dressed in leggings and a purple hoodie and already arguing with herself about whether a quiz in science counted as “basically a test,” I had washed my face, rinsed my mug, and put David’s apple slices in a plastic container like I always did.
“Mom, are we out of the cinnamon waffles?” she asked, pulling open the freezer.
“No, sweetheart. Top shelf.”
She found them and popped two into the toaster. Ten years old, tall for her age, observant in a way that made me careful even when I was tired. Emma never missed much. She had David’s brown eyes but none of his instinct to turn feelings into silence. Her face opened to everything. You could still see each thought travel across it.
She looked at me after a minute.
“You okay?”
I reached up and tucked a strand of hair behind my ear. “Just didn’t sleep great.”
She nodded, accepting that answer for now, and began telling me about a poster project on the solar system.